Book Image

iWork for Mac OS X Cookbook

By : Alexander Anichkin
Book Image

iWork for Mac OS X Cookbook

By: Alexander Anichkin

Overview of this book

<p>iWork is Apple on a shoestring: iWork costs a fraction of the price of full creative suites and yet is packed with the potential to achieve the same results. <br /><br />With its word processing and design application called Pages, spreadsheet program Numbers, and presentation creator Keynote, the elegance of iWork is its intuitive behaviour which makes it easy to learn and popular with Mac users. <br /><br />While Pages can open Word documents and be exported into Word, Numbers doesn't stumble over Excel and iWork documents can be created and viewed on portable devices. Lesser known is iWork's ability to give users great design capability which is comparable to top-end programs such as InDesign and Quark.<br /><br />"iWork for Mac OS X Cookbook" is the 'missing manual' which shows users how to exploit iWork's full potential. By taking a lateral approach to this relatively inexpensive software, you can find solutions to all your professional and creative needs, from designing logos and brochures to producing a high quality monthly magazine.<br /><br />This cookbook begins with simple ways to format and organize text with stunning graphic highlights and drop caps, as well as showing how easy it is to import and export MS documents in a couple of clicks.<br /><br />This well-illustrated, step-by-step guide then shows you how to create your own unique clip art, logos, and photo cut-outs and even how to draw your own pictures for home or professional projects, such as cards or magazines.<br /><br />Packed with the author's own tips and his 'beyond the manuals' approach to iWork, this book will convince you that, whatever you're working on, this is the only productivity suite you need.</p>
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
iWork for Mac OS X Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Making JPEG images from iWork documents


This format is one of the most commonly used in graphics, especially for digital photographs. It is used for storing and transmitting photos on the Internet. One of the reasons for this is that the format allows varying degrees of compression with little loss of quality. This is what makes JPEGs so attractive for web use. For iWork projects, you may want to make your finished work—a poster, a card, a logo, a flyer, or simply a collage of snapshots from the family holiday—into a JPEG. This recipe shows how to do this.

How to do it...

When you finish working on an iWork project—in Pages, for example—with its wide choice of templates, do the following:

  1. 1. Choose Print from the File menu, or press Command and type P.

  2. 2. When the Print dialog opens, click on the PDF drop-down menu in the bottom-left corner.

  3. 3. Choose Save PDF to iPhoto.

The workflow starts, and after a few seconds iPhoto launches and imports your iWork document as JPEG. In iPhoto, you can edit...